Friday, November 28, 2008

Happy Thanksgiving!


Hope you all had a great Thanksgiving! Karina sure enjoyed the turkey :) She wouldn't eat the little pieces we put on her tray, but gave her the drumstick and she went to town! She also enjoyed some mashed potatoes, stuffing and squash soup. I put the squash soup in a sippy cup (thanks Adriane for the tip) and she loved it! I think I am going to try to make her a smoothie in the morning and put it in the sippy cup (a cup without a valve) for her to enjoy.

With the turkey leftovers, I am going to make turkey enchiladas tonight. Some store bought mole sauce, shredded cheese, turkey, fresh salsa, cilantro, sour cream and whole wheat tortillas. Heat the sauce in a skillet, put some of the shredded turkey in. Wrap some of the turkey with mole in a tortilla and put in baking dish. Repeat until done with turkey. Leave some mole sauce to pour over the top and then cover with shredded cheese. You can also put cheese inside the tortilla. Bake in the over for about 30-45 min.

Salsa recipe:
1 large can of whole tomatoes
1 jalapeno (take out seeds and chopped)
about 1/2 a red onion roughly chopped
cilantro (to your taste - I usually grab a handful)
salt
pepper
about a clove of garlic, minced.

Put ingredients into a blender or food processor. Mix until it is the consistency you want. Less if you like it chunky and more if you want it smooth.





Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Cookbooks for kids


I was surprised at how few cookbooks there are on the shelves of various bookstores around the city. Most of the books (and baby/toddler food websites too) are from the UK. Online I found a lot more books, but how much time do us moms really have to go through cookbooks and find recipes? Not much, but there are those days when the little one's (or ones') nap lasts longer than usual and we find ourselves with a few minutes of time to ourselves. My passion is cooking, so I take that time to write this blog or go through my cookbooks (or search the web) and find some recipes (or watch Sex and the City on demand :) ).

These are the cookbooks I have that I either bought or was given as a gift:

- "Wholesome meals for babies and toddlers: healthy foods your kids will love to eat" Parragon Books, Ltd, UK. ISBN: 1-40546-845-9. This book categorizes recipes by 6-9 months, 9-12 months, 12-18 months, 18-36 months, 3-4 years and 4 years plus as well as an introductory section and a sample meal planner for a week on each age group.

-"What to Expect the First Year," Babies First Recipes, pp748-755. ISBN-13: 978-0-7611-2958-8. I've made the lentil stew, which Karina loved and we could eat it too. It has some great quick tips and also has a recipe for a first birthday cake with cream cheese frosting. (I had grand plans of making Karina's first cake, but time was not on our side, so I bought Trader Joe's vanilla cake mix and made buttercream frosting. She loved it! But was way too neat!)

-"Kid Favorites Made Healthy." Better Homes and Gardens, ISBN 978-0-696-21750-0. This is pretty good, with healthy recipes for older toddlers and kids, but be sure to talk to your doctor before you start giving your child low fat, or non fat milk products. I am going to try the Turkey-Apple Sausage patties on pg26 this weekend!

-"Mom-a-licious: tasty. easy. healthy." By Domenica Catelli. ISBN: 978-1-933754-14-7. This book is great. I have found some good tips. It has "reclaiming the pantry" + "facing the refrigerator"+ "facing the freezer" sections, telling you what to kick out and keep in that is healthier. Take it with a grain of salt. Everything in moderation! I definitely keep alot of frozen veggies and fruits on hand for quick additions to meals. My new favorite breakfast comes from pg. 29 - "skylar's stinky cheese breakfast sandwich" - eggs with herbs with brie, camembert or Taleggio on wheat toast! Mmmmm. Karina loves it too! This book (and my friend Adriane) inspired me to use Almond butter on Karina's toast, which she loves! I also put it on banana slices. Very messy, but good. I'm still dying to try the one dish dinner on pg. 84 - lemony chicken with vegetables and Parmesan and the sesame and soy-roasted fall vegetables on pg. 111. I did make the gingered rice and edamame on pg. 114. Soooo good! I keep frozen edamame on hand because it is a great source of protein too!

-"Yum-o! The Family Cookbook." by Rachel Ray. ISBN 978-0-307-40726-9. Great, easy recipes that get the kids involved! Including some recipes submitted by moms and kids on her website. They are healthy and her aim was to make them cost conscious. I just got it, so haven't made anything from it yet.

-"Cooking for Kids Bible." ISBN-13: 978-1-4127-2346-6. This has some fun recipes, especially good for kids parties, classroom treats and if you want to take dinner fun! It also has tips for cooking with kids and teaching your kids to cook!.

-Betty Crocker's Cook Book for Boys and Girls, Copyright 1957. This was given to Karina from her Ya Ya. It was her grandfather's when he was a kid (aka Far Far). It has party ideas circa 1957 and even gives kids ideas on how to surprise mom for Mother's day or Valentines day :)

There are many other books. (Look soon for my reviews on baby food books I got at the library - long wait lists...must be popular!) I also just use the "adult" cookbooks I have along with "google" and try to give Karina what we eat. We're lucky she usually is a great eater. Tonight she was not, however. I took my luck too far :) She ate all of her toast, but did not like the lamb and raita I made :( she ate a little bit of the lamb when I mixed it in with some brown and wild rice (trader joes sells a great mixture). She didn't like the cucumber, but liked the yogurt (mixed with lemon zest and greek seasoning - mint, oregano, and something else I can't remember). I sauteed the lamb chop (which are on sale at Safeway right now) covered with coriander, cumin, greek seasoning, lemon juice, olive oil and garlic. I started a tradition tonight. On nights that Tim bowls I am going to make a "special meal" for me and Karina, that hopefully as she gets older, she will help me with (and we can eat things like lamb and scallops that Tim doesn't like).

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Curry anyone?

This is a posting with an article on bland baby food from the Ballard Moms listserve that I thought would interest everyone...I've tried mild curry and even turkey chili with Karina. She wasn't too keen on the curry, but LOVED the chili. Thanks for the article Sheri!

"I came across this article this morning, and thought it might be of
interest to some folks. It's an article from the AP from a couple of
years ago about how the western culture has trained its babies to have
bland palate, but that is a recent development and not universal.

Sheri, mom of 2"

HEALTH LIBRARY

(AP) -- Ditch the rice cereal and mashed peas, and make way for
enchiladas, curry and even -- gasp! -- hot peppers.

It's time to discard everything you think you know about feeding
babies. It turns out most advice parents get about weaning infants
onto solid foods -- even from pediatricians -- is more myth than
science.

That's right, rice cereal may not be the best first food. Peanut
butter doesn't have to wait until after the first birthday. Offering
fruits before vegetables won't breed a sweet tooth. And strong
spices? Bring 'em on.

"There's a bunch of mythology out there about this," says Dr. David
Bergman, a Stanford University pediatrics professor. "There's not
much evidence to support any particular way of doing things."

Word of that has been slow to reach parents and the stacks of baby
books they rely on to navigate this often intimidating period of
their children's lives. But that may be changing.

As research increasingly suggests a child's first experiences with
food shape later eating habits, doctors say battling obesity and
improving the American diet may mean debunking the myths and
broadening babies' palates.

It's easier -- and harder -- than it sounds. Easier because experts
say 6-month-olds can eat many of the same things their parents do.
Harder because it's tough to find detailed guidance for nervous parents.

"Parents have lost touch with the notion that these charts are
guides, not rules," says Rachel Brandeis, a spokeswoman for the
American Dietetic Association. "Babies start with a very clean palate
and it's your job to mold it."

It's easy to mistake that for a regimented process. Most parents are
told to start rice cereal at 6 months, then slowly progress to simple
vegetables, mild fruits and finally pasta and meat.

Ethnic foods and spices are mostly ignored by the guidelines –
cinnamon and avocados are about as exotic as it gets -- and parents
are warned off potential allergens such as nuts and seafood for at
least a year.

Yet experts say children over 6 months can handle most anything, with
a few caveats: Be cautious if you have a family history of allergies;
introduce one food at a time and watch for any problems; and make
sure the food isn't a choking hazard.

Parents elsewhere in the world certainly take a more freewheeling
approach, often starting babies on heartier, more flavorful fare --
from meats in African countries to fish and radishes in Japan and
artichokes and tomatoes in France.

The difference is cultural, not scientific, says Dr. Jatinder Bhatia,
a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics' nutrition committee
who says the American approach suffers from a Western bias that fails
to reflect the nation's ethnic diversity.

Bhatia says he hopes his group soon will address not only that, but
also ways to better educate parents about which rules must be
followed and which ones are only suggestions.

Rayya Azarbeygui, a 35-year-old Lebanese immigrant living in New
York, isn't waiting. After her son was born last year, she decided he
should eat the same foods she does -- heavily seasoned Middle Eastern
dishes like hummus and baba ghanoush.

"My pediatrician thinks I'm completely crazy," says Azarbeygui, whose
son is now 13 months old. "But you know, he sees my child thriving
and so says, 'You know what, children in India eat like that. Why not
yours?"'

How to introduce healthy children to solid food has rarely been
studied. Even the federal government has given it little attention;
dietary guidelines apply only to children 2 and older.

In a review of the research, Nancy Butte, a pediatrics professor at
Baylor College of Medicine, found that many strongly held assumptions
-- such as the need to offer foods in a particular order or to delay
allergenic foods – have little scientific basis.

Take rice cereal, for example. Under conventional American wisdom,
it's the best first food. But Butte says iron-rich meat -- often one
of the last foods American parents introduce -- would be a better
choice.

Grain cereals might be worst thing Dr. David Ludwig of Children's
Hospital Boston, a specialist in pediatric nutrition, says some
studies suggest rice and other highly processed grain cereals
actually could be among the worst foods for infants.

"These foods are in a certain sense no different from adding sugar to
formula. They digest very rapidly in the body into sugar, raising
blood sugar and insulin levels" and could contribute to later health
problems, including obesity, he says.

The lack of variety in the American approach also could be a problem.
Exposing infants to more foods may help them adapt to different foods
later, which Ludwig says may be key to getting older children to eat
healthier.

Food allergy fears get some of the blame for the bland approach. For
decades doctors have said the best way to prevent allergies is to
limit infants to bland foods, avoiding seasonings, citrus, nuts and
certain seafood.

But Butte's review found no evidence that children without family
histories of food allergies benefit from this. Others suspect
avoiding certain foods or eating bland diets actually could make
allergies more likely. Some exposure might be a good thing.

And bring on the spices. Science is catching up with the folklore
that babies in the womb and those who are breast-fed taste -- and
develop a taste for -- whatever Mom eats. So experts say if Mom
enjoys loads of oregano, baby might, too.

That's been Maru Mondragon's experience. The 40-year-old Mexican
indulged on spicy foods while pregnant with her youngest son, 21-
month-old Russell, but not while carrying his 3-year-old brother,
Christian.

Christian has a mild palate while his younger brother snacks on
jalapenos and demands hot salsa on everything.

"If it is really spicy, he cries, but still keeps eating it," says
Mondragon, who moved to Denver four years ago.

That's the sort of approach Bhatia says more parents should know
about. Parents should view this as a chance to encourage children to
embrace healthy eating habits and introduce them to their culture and
heritage.

"So you eat a lot of curry," he says, "try junior on a mild curry."

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This
material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]